Brindley Paul J, Mitreva Makedonka, Ghedin Elodie, Lustigman Sara
Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Tropical Medicine, George Washington University Medical Center, Washington, D. C., USA.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2009 Oct 26;3(10):e538. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0000538.
More than two billion people (one-third of humanity) are infected with parasitic roundworms or flatworms, collectively known as helminth parasites. These infections cause diseases that are responsible for enormous levels of morbidity and mortality, delays in the physical development of children, loss of productivity among the workforce, and maintenance of poverty. Genomes of the major helminth species that affect humans, and many others of agricultural and veterinary significance, are now the subject of intensive genome sequencing and annotation. Draft genome sequences of the filarial worm Brugia malayi and two of the human schistosomes, Schistosoma japonicum and S. mansoni, are now available, among others. These genome data will provide the basis for a comprehensive understanding of the molecular mechanisms involved in helminth nutrition and metabolism, host-dependent development and maturation, immune evasion, and evolution. They are likely also to predict new potential vaccine candidates and drug targets. In this review, we present an overview of these efforts and emphasize the potential impact and importance of these new findings.
超过20亿人(占人类总数的三分之一)感染了寄生性蛔虫或扁虫,统称为蠕虫寄生虫。这些感染引发的疾病导致了极高的发病率和死亡率,阻碍儿童身体发育,造成劳动力生产力下降,并致使贫困状况持续存在。影响人类的主要蠕虫物种以及许多具有农业和兽医意义的其他蠕虫物种的基因组,如今已成为密集基因组测序和注释的对象。例如,丝虫马来布鲁线虫以及两种人体血吸虫——日本血吸虫和曼氏血吸虫的基因组序列草图现已可得。这些基因组数据将为全面理解蠕虫营养与代谢、依赖宿主的发育与成熟、免疫逃避及进化所涉及的分子机制提供基础。它们还有望预测新的潜在疫苗候选物和药物靶点。在本综述中,我们概述了这些研究工作,并强调了这些新发现的潜在影响和重要性。